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Displaying Results 176 - 200 of 33245 on page 8 of 1330
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‘In the Image of God: the Trinitarian Anthropology of St Bonaventure, St Thomas Aquinas and the Blessed Jan Van Ruusbroec Part I
(2013)
‘In the Image of God: the Trinitarian Anthropology of St Bonaventure, St Thomas Aquinas and the Blessed Jan Van Ruusbroec Part I
(2013)
Abstract:
Yes
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/1521
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‘Ireland on a Plate’: Curating the 2011 State Banquet for Queen Elizabeth II
(2015)
MAHON, ELAINE
‘Ireland on a Plate’: Curating the 2011 State Banquet for Queen Elizabeth II
(2015)
MAHON, ELAINE
Abstract:
<p>State dining has been shown to define the social, cultural and political position of a nation’s leaders (Albala, 2011; Baughman, 1959; Strong, 2003) and has been used by rulers for centuries to display wealth, cement alliances and impress foreign visitors (Albala, 2007; De Vooght and Scholliers, 2011; Young, 2002). This paper will show how the state banquet for Queen Elizabeth II was carefully curated to represent Ireland’s diplomatic, cultural and culinary identity. As the first visit by a reigning British monarch since Ireland had gained independence from Britain in 1922, the state visit of Queen Elizabeth II to Ireland in 2011 was a significant event. The state banquet hosted by President Mary McAleese at Dublin Castle was to be the pinnacle of the visit. This paper will demonstrate how the brief ‘Ireland on a plate’ was fulfilled and the statecraft involved in what was to be a theatre of political and cultural diplomacy and a showcase of the Irish gastronomic register.&...
http://arrow.dit.ie/tfschafart/157
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‘It’s William back from the dead’: Commemoration, Representation and Race in Akala’s Hip-Hop Shakespeare
(2016)
O'Neill, Stephen
‘It’s William back from the dead’: Commemoration, Representation and Race in Akala’s Hip-Hop Shakespeare
(2016)
O'Neill, Stephen
Abstract:
Recent work oriented towards race in Shakespeare studies has involved calls not just for critical attention to race as an ever -‐‑ present, constitutive element of Shakespeare but also for modes of scholarship and criticism that actively promote critical race studies, diversity and inclusivity within the field . In her extraordinarily reflective study of race, Shakespeare and contemporary America, Ayanna Thompson describes her work ‘ as a n act of intervention and activism ’ ( 2011 : 128) . Thompson urges the various constituencies of the book’s audience, including teachers, theatre practitioners and community activists to facilitate discussions about race both in and through Shakespeare , which she...
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/8899/
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‘Just enough to make you take it seriously’: exploring students’ attitudes towards peer assessment
(2013)
McGarr, Oliver; Clifford, Amanda M
‘Just enough to make you take it seriously’: exploring students’ attitudes towards peer assessment
(2013)
McGarr, Oliver; Clifford, Amanda M
Abstract:
The use of peer learning and peer assessment has gained increasing interest in higher education driven by both its educational value and by its ability to provide students with the opportunity to develop important transferrable skills. This paper reports on the use of peer learning and peer assessment with a cohort of four-year undergraduate physiotherapy students and an eighteen month taught post-graduate teacher education programme. The study observed the students’ engagement in the process, surveyed their opinions on the activity at the end of the experience and conducted one focus group discussion with a subset of students from each cohort. The study found that the vast majority of respondents felt that the experience was valuable and enjoyable. However, when asked to indicate whether it was a fairer method of assessment there were more varied responses. Similarly when asked whether their peers should have a greater say in their overall grade the majority disagreed. Views ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/4707
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‘Linking Herring’: do we really understand plasticity?
(2009)
Dickey‐Collas, M; Clarke, M; Slotte, A
‘Linking Herring’: do we really understand plasticity?
(2009)
Dickey‐Collas, M; Clarke, M; Slotte, A
Abstract:
This is a pre-copy-editing, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in ICES Journal of Marine Science following peer review. The definitive publisher-authenticated version Dickey-Collas, M., Clarke, M., and Slotte, A. 2009. “Linking Herring”: do we really understand plasticity? – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 66: 1649–1651 is available online at: http://icesjms.oxfordjournals.org/content/66/8/1649
The symposium was organized to link our understanding of herring biology, population dynamics, and exploitation in the context of ecosystem complexity. It is beyond argument that herring play a pivotal role in shaping the structure and dynamics of many boreal continental-shelf ecosystems. Therefore, in moving to an ecosystem approach to fishery management, the time seemed right for ICES to hold another herring symposium. Since the last ICES symposia on herring in the 1960s (“Herring Symposium”, 1961; “Biology of Early Stages and Recruitment Mechanisms of Herring”, ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10793/422
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‘Liveridge is in Ireland’: Richard Leveridge and the Earliest Surviving Dublin Birthday Odes
(2017)
Murphy, Estelle
‘Liveridge is in Ireland’: Richard Leveridge and the Earliest Surviving Dublin Birthday Odes
(2017)
Murphy, Estelle
Abstract:
The tradition of composing birthday and New Year’s Day odes for the monarch in London is one that dates back to at least 1617. It was not until almost a century later that equivalent works began to be produced in Dublin. Until now the earliest surviving birthday-ode text has been understood to be Hail Happy Day, set by Charles Ximenes in 1707. However, a hitherto unidentified printed text, dated 1701 and attributed to the theatre musician Richard Leveridge, stands as a strong candidate for the earliest surviving Dublin birthday-ode text, meaning that the tradition of mounting such ceremonial performances in the city began earlier than has previously been verifiable. It transpires that the same poetic text is set to music in a manuscript held in the British Library. The source also contains a second ode in the same hand, which, through rastrological evidence, can be identified as another Dublin work. This article makes the case that—despite having previously been misattributed—this s...
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/8282/
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‘Moving In’: Difficulties and Support in the Transition to Higher Education for In-Service Social Care Students
(2013)
McSweeney, Fiona
‘Moving In’: Difficulties and Support in the Transition to Higher Education for In-Service Social Care Students
(2013)
McSweeney, Fiona
Abstract:
<p>This paper reports on the difficulties and supports experienced by social care practitioners within the educational institution during their transition to higher education. A life transition such as entering higher education causes stress for individuals and social support is essential in successfully dealing with this stress (Anderson et al., 2012). Fifteen social care practitioners were interviewed twice during and once at the end of their first academic year in college. Findings indicate that participants were reluctant to approach staff for help despite anxiety about classes and assignments. Discussion and debate in class helped learning and contributed to feelings of being valued. ‘Moving in’ was a slow process with a physical and emotional impact for which they were unprepared. Student peers were a source of emotional and cognitive support but developing relationships took time. By the end of the transition phase participants noted changes and gains in themselves and ...
http://arrow.dit.ie/aaschsslarts/54
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‘National Identity’ and ‘Religious Profession’: The Census in Northern Ireland 2011
(2017)
Macourt, Malcolm. P. A.
‘National Identity’ and ‘Religious Profession’: The Census in Northern Ireland 2011
(2017)
Macourt, Malcolm. P. A.
Abstract:
In the new millennium a key issue being addressed in the construction of censuses is: Is it appropriate for censuses to include questions which go beyond matters of fact to involve memory or opinion? Questions which clearly involve opinion are usually either the subject of elections and referendums or are contained in opinion research – perhaps conducted by academics or by a commercial marketresearch organisation. Two inquiries on the boundary between ‘fact’ and ‘matter of opinion’ are those concerning religious profession and national identity. In Ireland religious profession was first introduced into the Census in 1861, national identity was introduced for the first time in 2011. This paper focuses on how far census data can be used to examine whether claimed religion and religion ‘brought up in’ are linked to national identity and what part (if any) residential location, age and socio-economic position play in any such link.
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/4433
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‘On the Slow Train to Nowhere?’ The European Union, ‘Enlargement Fatigue’ and the Western Balkans
(2014)
O'Brennan, John
‘On the Slow Train to Nowhere?’ The European Union, ‘Enlargement Fatigue’ and the Western Balkans
(2014)
O'Brennan, John
Abstract:
The EU is seeking to repeat the success of its eastern enlargement in the Western Balkans.The accession of Croatia on 1 July 2013 provides a template for other Western Balkan states to emulate as they seek to transpose and implement the EU acquis communautaire and advance their membership prospects. But the EU’s engagement with the Western Balkans is proving uneven and unsatisfactory: the enlargement process is now on ‘life support’ and ‘flat lining’ along a trajectory of ‘frozen negotiating chapters’ and mutual mistrust toward (despite the promise made at Thessaloniki a decade ago) an increasingly uncertain destination.The main reason for this is ‘enlargement fatigue’ amongst the Member States of the European Union.This article explores the underlying causes of this phenomenon and how it is impacting on the EU’s relationship with the Western Balkans. It demonstrates that there is a symbiotic link between enlargement fatigue on the EU side of the relationship and the deficit of impl...
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/7960/
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‘One blue’. Response to Winder and LeHeron, Assembling a Blue Economies Moment
(2017)
Foley, Ronan
‘One blue’. Response to Winder and LeHeron, Assembling a Blue Economies Moment
(2017)
Foley, Ronan
Abstract:
This paper responds to Winder and Le Heron’s (2017) article on the Blue Economy and starts by acknowledging their laudable attempt to critically examine the terminology and in particular its economic framing. Their articulation of how this can be extended to consider bioeconomic relations, ethics and politics and where geographers play a role in innovative forms of knowledge production is then critically examined. I suggest that the term blue needs to be examined more fully alongside the term economic and identify a range of complex palettes and forms that need to be considered. In addition, I propose that health in a range of forms, both human and non-human, might be fed into the mix to deepen their discussion of both value and ethics of care. Finally, the notion of ‘one blue’, following the example of ‘one health’, is tentatively suggested as a conceptual term to deepen their call for stronger aspects of therapeutic assemblage thinking to be fed into future ocean and marine manage...
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/8937/
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‘One Cas, Two Cas:’ Exploring the affective dimensions of family language policy
(2017)
Smith-Christmas, Cassie
‘One Cas, Two Cas:’ Exploring the affective dimensions of family language policy
(2017)
Smith-Christmas, Cassie
Abstract:
The full text of this article will not be available on ULIR until the embargo expires on the 13/7/2018
The aim of this article is to illustrate the fluid nature of family language policy (FLP) and how the realities of any one FLP are re-negotiated by caregivers and children in tandem. In particular, the paper will focus on the affective dimensions of FLP and will demonstrate how the same reality—in this case, a grandmother’s use of a child-centred discourse style as a means to encouraging her grandchildren to use their minority language, Scottish Gaelic—can play out differently among siblings. Using a longitudinal perspective, the paper begins by examining a recorded interaction between a grandmother, Nana1, and her granddaughter Maggie (3;4) and will discuss how Nana’s high use of questions and laissez-faire attitude to Maggie’s use of English contribute to the child-centred nature of the interaction, and in turn, to Maggie’s playful use of Gaelic. The paper then examines an in...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/5897
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‘Ordinary decent domestic violence’: A discursive analysis of family law judges’ interviews
(2015)
Naughton, Catherine M; O'Donnell, Aisling T; Greenwood, Ronni M; Muldoon, Orla T
‘Ordinary decent domestic violence’: A discursive analysis of family law judges’ interviews
(2015)
Naughton, Catherine M; O'Donnell, Aisling T; Greenwood, Ronni M; Muldoon, Orla T
Abstract:
This study examined judges’ constructions of the ‘best interests of the child’ in child custody and access arraignments where there were allegations of domestic violence within the context of an interview. Using interviews with six Irish District Court judges, a micro-structural discourse analysis enabled the identification of socio-cultural discourses, scientific knowledge and judges’ own values and beliefs biases about custody arraignments in cases of domestic violence. Judges’ discourses were shaped by an idealisation of the nuclear family unit which resulted in a pro-access philosophy (Theme 1). The knowledge that domestic violence had occurred challenged this ideology and, to rhetorically manage this dilemma, judges’ talk normalised or trivialised abusive parents’ behaviour, which rendered domestic violence irrelevant to child custody and access (Theme 2). Mothers who alleged domestic violence when they disputed contact between fathers and their children were pathologised throu...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/5803
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‘Potentially inappropriate or specifically appropriate?’ Qualitative evaluation of general practitioners views on prescribing, polypharmacy and potentially inappropriate prescribing in older people.
(2016)
Clyne, Barbara; Cooper, Janine A; Hughes, Carmel M; Fahey, Tom; Smith, Susan M; OPTI-SC...
‘Potentially inappropriate or specifically appropriate?’ Qualitative evaluation of general practitioners views on prescribing, polypharmacy and potentially inappropriate prescribing in older people.
(2016)
Clyne, Barbara; Cooper, Janine A; Hughes, Carmel M; Fahey, Tom; Smith, Susan M; OPTI-SCRIPT Study Team
Abstract:
<p>The original article is available at www.biomedcentral.com</p>
<p><strong>Background:</strong> Potentially inappropriate prescribing (PIP) is common in older people in primary care, as evidenced by a significant body of quantitative research. However, relatively few qualitative studies have investigated the phenomenon of PIP and its underlying processes from the perspective of general practitioners (GPs). The aim of this paper is to explore qualitatively, GP perspectives regarding prescribing and PIP in older primary care patients.</p> <p><strong>Method:</strong> Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with GPs participating in a randomised controlled trial (RCT) of an intervention to decrease PIP in older patients (≥70 years) in Ireland. Interviews were conducted with GP participants (both intervention and control) from the OPTI-SCRIPT cluster RCT as part of the trial process evaluation between January and J...
http://epubs.rcsi.ie/gpart/97
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‘Ready-access’ CT imaging for an orthopaedic trauma clinic
(2011)
Cawley, D; Hennessy, A
‘Ready-access’ CT imaging for an orthopaedic trauma clinic
(2011)
Cawley, D; Hennessy, A
Abstract:
Ready-Access to CT imaging facilities in Orthopaedic Trauma Clinics is not a standard facility. This facility has been available at the regional trauma unit, in Merlin Park Hospital, Galway for the past four years. We reviewed the use of this facility over a 2-year period when 100 patients had CT scans as part of their trauma clinic assessment. The rate of CT scan per clinic was 0.6. The mean waiting time for a CT scan was 30 minutes. 20 (20%) new fractures were confirmed, 33 (33%) fractures were out-ruled, 25 (25%) fractures demonstrated additional information and 8 (8%) had additional fractures. 20 (20%) patients were discharged and 12 (12%) patients were admitted as a result of the CT scan. It adds little time and cost to CT scanning lists.
http://hdl.handle.net/10147/128133
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‘Revolutionary and Refractory? The Irish Colleges in Paris and the French Revolution
(2013)
‘Revolutionary and Refractory? The Irish Colleges in Paris and the French Revolution
(2013)
Abstract:
Yes
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/1799
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‘Sinful Singleness’? Exploring the Discourses on Irish Single Women’s Emigration to England, 1922–1948
(2008)
Redmond, Jennifer
‘Sinful Singleness’? Exploring the Discourses on Irish Single Women’s Emigration to England, 1922–1948
(2008)
Redmond, Jennifer
Abstract:
In the interwar and immediate post-war years, the persistently high rates of emigration by young, single Irish women gave rise to worries over their moral and spiritual welfare. This was partly because of their assumed extreme vulnerability as women coming from rural loca- tions to the metropolises of England. It seems that the combination of their singleness and their gender was the prime reason for the concern evinced predominantly by the Roman Catholic Church, but also by lay organisations and the Irish governments. Multiple sources of danger for girls were perceived from their journey ‘across the water’ to their places of employment, from which they were in need of help and protection, if not prohibition. The majority of pronouncements on the topic were negative towards women, but no equivalent amount of concern was given to male migrants often of similar age and background and who also migrated as single persons. Thus, singleness was a gendered ‘problem’. Whilst studies of Iris...
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/4804/
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‘Steadfast supporters of the British connection’? Belfast Presbyterians and the Act of Union, c. 1798 – 1840
(2008)
Wright, Jonathan Jeffrey
‘Steadfast supporters of the British connection’? Belfast Presbyterians and the Act of Union, c. 1798 – 1840
(2008)
Wright, Jonathan Jeffrey
Abstract:
No abstract available
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/6601/
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‘Swimming in the swamp’ – inquiry into accreditation, community development, and social change
(2013)
Fitzsimons, Camilla; Dorman, Peter
‘Swimming in the swamp’ – inquiry into accreditation, community development, and social change
(2013)
Fitzsimons, Camilla; Dorman, Peter
Abstract:
Drawing from extensive experience as community educators, this paper discusses accreditation and its relationship to community development as informed by a cooperative inquiry conducted by tutors. Beginning with our rationale for undertaking the inquiry, it details our approach to community development and the centrality of education within this. It offers a review of some literature pertinent to both concepts before presenting findings from the inquiry itself. It concludes by emphasising the positive features of the awarding of credits for set-learning periods but expresses concern about difficulties with contemporary models of practice including a degree of discordance between accreditation and education for social change.
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/7868/
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‘Systemic Trauma’: The Impact on Parents Whose Children Have Experienced Sexual Abuse
(2014)
Kilroy, Sarah J.; Egan, Jonathan; Maliszewska, Aneta; Sarma, Kiran M.
‘Systemic Trauma’: The Impact on Parents Whose Children Have Experienced Sexual Abuse
(2014)
Kilroy, Sarah J.; Egan, Jonathan; Maliszewska, Aneta; Sarma, Kiran M.
Abstract:
This paper examines the impact on parents in an Irish context whose children have experienced sexual abuse and aims to explore the pathways to distress. This is in order to understand what factors facilitate or hinder parents from supporting their child to the best of their ability, given that parental support is a crucial moderating factor in children’s recoveries. Semi-structured interviews were carried out with 13 parents in this context and analyzed using a grounded theory methodology. The overall concept that emerged was termed ‘systemic trauma’ and was composed of eight categories that help to explain the pathways of impact for parents. This model can help clinicians understand and respond to the needs of parents in the aftermath of CSA.
http://hdl.handle.net/10147/322582
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‘Teenage traumas’ The discursive construction of young people as a ‘problem’ in an Irish radio documentary
(2005)
Devlin, Maurice
‘Teenage traumas’ The discursive construction of young people as a ‘problem’ in an Irish radio documentary
(2005)
Devlin, Maurice
Abstract:
Previous research has shown that media representations of young people consistently portray them as in one way or another ‘problematic’, but little such research has focused specifically on the medium of radio. This article contains a detailed case study of a radio documentary series broadcast in Ireland called The Teenage Years. It explores the editorial, rhetorical and narrative devices used to construct and sustain a mainstream clinical-psychological discourse of adolescence, one which effectively ‘pathologizes’ the teenage years. It also ‘homogenizes’ them, privileging age as an explanatory factor in shaping identity and development and thereby systematically ignoring other aspects of social inequality and stratification. It is argued that this is an important ideological dimension of the discourse expressed and enacted by the series.
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/8399/
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‘The Belfast Chameleon’: Ulster, Ceylon and the Imperial Life of Sir James Emerson Tennent
(2013)
Wright, Jonathan Jeffrey
‘The Belfast Chameleon’: Ulster, Ceylon and the Imperial Life of Sir James Emerson Tennent
(2013)
Wright, Jonathan Jeffrey
Abstract:
Abstract included in text.
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/7624/
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‘The Choreography of Resolution: Conflict, Movement and Neuroscience’ Michelle Le Baron, Carrie Macleod, and Andrew Floyer Acland, EDITORS
(2014)
O'Brien, Aileen; Lloyd, Mary
‘The Choreography of Resolution: Conflict, Movement and Neuroscience’ Michelle Le Baron, Carrie Macleod, and Andrew Floyer Acland, EDITORS
(2014)
O'Brien, Aileen; Lloyd, Mary
Abstract:
This is an exciting book, containing many revolutionary ideas that challenge mediation ideology and practice. The book starts with a quote from James Joyce about Mr. Duffy, who “lived a short distance from his body”. This humorous statement aptly captures how many involved in conflict and conflict resolution live in their heads in a state of disconnection from their body. Mediation and mediators are embedded in modern culture with belief systems that privilege mind and sight over body, spirit and imagination.
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/5049/
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‘The Ireland that We Dreamed of’: Rejecting Convention in John McGahern’s The Dark
(2017)
Singleton, John
‘The Ireland that We Dreamed of’: Rejecting Convention in John McGahern’s The Dark
(2017)
Singleton, John
Abstract:
John McGahern’s second novel The Dark , banned upon publication in 1965, is remembered for shining a light on the darkest aspects of Irish Life: a confessional society that masked institutionalised physical, mental and sexual abuse, the full ex tent of which would be exposed in the Ryan Report (2009). Focusing on the depiction of individual moments of violence, however, encourages us to view the protagonist as a powerless victim and to disregard the novel’s central triumph: the rejection of socia l expectation and the realisation of a ‘real authority’, independent of family, faith and fatherland.
http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/8301/
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‘The Miraculous Mathematics of the World’: Proving the Existence of God in Cardinal Péter Pázmány’s Kalauz
(2010)
Ó hAnnracháin, Tadhg
‘The Miraculous Mathematics of the World’: Proving the Existence of God in Cardinal Péter Pázmány’s Kalauz
(2010)
Ó hAnnracháin, Tadhg
Abstract:
This paper offers a brief examination of Cardinal Péter Pázmány’s meditation on the role of the beauty and wonder of the natural world in leading to the true knowledge of God, which is placed at the beginning of his most important work, the Guide to the Divine Truth (Isteni Igazsàgra Vezérlô Kalauz). Pázmány’s treatment of this subject offers an insight into the Catholic intellectual milieu which ultimately rejected the Copernican cosmology championed by Galileo in favour of a geocentric and geostatic universe. In this regard, the confidence with which Pázmány asserts the harmony and compatibility between secular knowledge and apprehension of nature and the conviction of the existence of a creator God is of particular importance. An analysis of this section of his work also points up a surprising contrast with Calvin’s treatment of the same subject in the Institutes of the Christian Religion. Pázmány was raised within the Reformed tradition until his teenage years and as a Catholic ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/7903
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‘The organisation and activism of Dublin’s Protestant working-class 1883-1935’ in Irish Historical Studies, xxix,no.113 (May 1994).
(1994)
Maguire, Martin
‘The organisation and activism of Dublin’s Protestant working-class 1883-1935’ in Irish Historical Studies, xxix,no.113 (May 1994).
(1994)
Maguire, Martin
Abstract:
Based on a range of sources including newly discovered records of the Dublin City and County Conservative Workingmens' Club founded in 1883.
http://eprints.dkit.ie/73/
Displaying Results 176 - 200 of 33245 on page 8 of 1330
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